Do you recycle?

   / Do you recycle?
  • Thread Starter
#21  
Harv,

When I was a kid, my dad owned a flour mill. He had a room where he tossed all the broken pieces of machinery that accumulated. He would let us kids haul a wheelbarrow of that scrap to the local junkyard down the road....as much as we could push ourselves. We'd get a few nickles for the movies and such. Now, when I have scrap metal that isn't anything I can find a use for, it just sits around taking up space. Aluminum cans I recycle. If I had big pieces of scrap metal, I'd probably find uses for them, but it bugs me to put just about any kind of metal scrap in the trash.

Chuck
 
   / Do you recycle? #22  
Bring it over to my house! /w3tcompact/icons/grin.gif

Harv - ever do any casting? Aluminum?
 
   / Do you recycle? #23  
Chuck52 -

<font color=blue>I was simply making the observation that civic recycling seems to be more prevalent in those areas which might be characterized as of a more liberal leaning....In other words, though they might be personally inclined to recycle, they see no need for the government to implement such a plan.</font color=blue>

Regardless of the "typical conservative's" view on government being intrusive in one's life, I think it all boils down to a more common human characteristic that crosses political views - Laziness.

If you make it "easy" for someone to participate, they are far more inclined to do so - doesn’t really matter what the “activity” is. (If you can get something done "just as good" with "less effort & cost", 99% of the time, you'll pick it unless there is some other "driving factor" (e.g. exercise, mental challenge, etc.)

Yes, I think that the "typical conservative" is less inclined to take things "at face value" when it comes to "environmental issues" (e.g. does it really save energy to recycle? What are the negative “trade offs?”, etc.) because of all the bunk the radical extremists have (and continue) to promote. (e.g. perceived alignment with "radicals" creates an air of suspicion around oneself.)

But, at the same time, that "average conservative" (or any "sane" person for that matter) doesn't want dirty water, contaminated soils, wildlife eradication, or smog-filled air. I think that's what probably irks a lot of conservative folks to a great degree - just because they are "conservative" doesn't mean they want to waste and destroy the world in which they live. I’m sure there are plenty of “liberals” who toss that can in to the trash instead of the recycle bin even though they want to “save the world.”

Again, make it easy, and you’ll get folks to participate - some because of faith, some because of reason, some because of peer pressure, and some “just because.”
 
   / Do you recycle? #24  
Dads old boss had him doing some dirt work for a trailer plant here and saved them some money so when they had to open a landfill they hired him to run it, They were so busy they would throw makita corless drills away by the box and get a new on to save time and money.2by4's byy the truck load and plywood scraps. Wed give the stuff away but alot of times had to bury it. They recycled metal but then and now it still comes to us. Ive built no telling how many things ive made out of free material. They used to recycle vinyl siding till some iron got in the recylers shredder and ruined it but now they started back again they recycle most cardbord, vinyl and carpet padding.
They tried to grind alot of it for boiler fuel but we quit that too much work hauling in wate tanks to mix with it and the machine was sesitive to some things.
Im like Wroughtn Harv i use all my metal up about 2 times a year i load up my dump truck 3 times and go to the scrap yard and the local scavengers look through it i tell them thers nothing bug enough to use again. Before i leave the scrap yard ive traded in my cash for any other valuables i can find usually have more home than i hauled off.
 
   / Do you recycle?
  • Thread Starter
#25  
Ranchman,

So does the government have a reasonable role to play in "making it easier"? There are real concerns about the economic benefits of most recycling; if it's such a great idea, why aren't more people making money at it? On the other hand, it's hard, for me at least, to not go with my gut feeling that many kinds of recycling ultimately end up in energy or material savings, or, if nothing more, save landfill space. Should government step in, promote, and even support something like recycling when market forces aren't sufficient to drive the effort?

Chuck
 
   / Do you recycle? #26  
Chuck, I know you asked Rancho, but I'm not sure they should. You & I share a healthy skepticism of govt control and bureaucracy, and I see nothing but complication coming from it, much like everything else, increasingly including the electric power industry. We could go on about power production, from the foolishness of the NRC to the politicization of more and more power production and delivery issues, but suffice it to say that every time Big Brother has stepped in, things got worse. If we are thinking about conservation of resources, the gov't is the last place I'd turn.

I'm not sure what can be done to increase participation, but it seems that the towns are doing well - and the schools are teaching it /w3tcompact/icons/eyes.gif, so it would seem that time will find greater participation. It would be nice to know the real science behind it, and be free of political motivations, one way or the other. I'd like to know our efforts are going toward real problems in a politics-free way, whether recycling, or pollution abatement, or drug research, or power production.
 
   / Do you recycle? #27  
My cousin has a great business building silage conveyors out of recycled plastic boards.

I love the transfer station versus the old pit dump. The steel drop off section is great for shopping for free steel.
 
   / Do you recycle? #28  
I'd rather see tax incentives to any company or individual that invents or develops more efficient use of recycled products. You know, stimulate that good ole American ingenuity.

I was in Israel a little over 7 years ago and they were experiencing a large influx of Russian "scientists" and technology "workers". The Israeli company that I was visiting at the time didn't want anything to do with the Russian immigrants because they didn't understand the meaning of work. In Russia, because of their communist system, individual excellence is not rewarded at a level that stimulates creativity and excellence to the level we have here.

I prefer we stimulate the private sector as opposed to turning things over to the govt.

Besides, I don't think the govt has time to be messing with recycling. They still don't have one of those clearly addressed constitutional responsibilities of theirs worked out yet .... protecting our borders. Do that first, then we'll see what we want them to tinker with next.
 
   / Do you recycle? #29  
Chuck52-

<font color=blue>So does the government have a reasonable role to play in "making it easier"?</font color=blue>

Depends on the program and the individual's perspective.

Looking at the "bigger picture," it all boils down to what one thinks is "reasonable and necessary" with regards to "appropriate levels" of government participation (or "intrusion" as some would see it) in daily life.

Choose your poison - a.k.a. government program - to discuss with regards to if it is "reasonable" for the government "responsibility" to "make it easier." Depending on the "group" responding vs. the program being discussed, you'll get different responses as to it being "reasonable" or appropriate.

My comment wasn't directed at whether one should or should not participate in a recycling program - for the record, I'm not advocating nor am I bashing existing recycling programs on the whole. I'm sure some "make sense" while others "don't." My comment was really geared toward the "human nature" part of the discussion. If it's easy, and you're encouraged (by whatever pressure is being exerted on you), you're more likely to participate/take action.

Same type of thing with anything that is "free." Even if you don't need or even truly want something, if someone offers you something for free - no strings attached - you are far more likely to take it than not (how many goofy squeeze balls, mouse pads, or other "junk" have you gotten from some promotion, exhibit, etc. only to get home and say "Why the heck did I bring this home???")

<font color=blue>There are real concerns about the economic benefits of most recycling; if it's such a great idea, why aren't more people making money at it?</font color=blue>

That was actually the point I was making - that some folks (i.e. conservative types) are more inclined to think critically about this subject due to their suspicion of the radical elements associated with environmentalism where those who have no suspicions of such elements (i.e. liberal types) are less inclined to ask such questions on this subject since they don't question the motivations behind the message. (Notice I never used absolutes in these statements, just generalizations.)

This seems to go back to the whole question you stated initially - e.g. are "liberals" more inclined than "conservatives" to recycle. Perhaps - but, not because of the desire for waste, but suspicions/questions as to what the real benefits/drawbacks are. This being said, I still think the biggest factor is ease of participation.

<font color=blue>On the other hand, it's hard, for me at least, to not go with my gut feeling...</font color=blue>

I'm not saying your "gut" is "correct" or "incorrect" with regards to recycling, but I will say that not all things that seem "intuitive" lead one to the "correct" conclusion (e.g. some things are counterintuitive.) Without facts on the issue, one's "gut" is all one has - but facts trump "feelings."

<font color=blue>Should government step in, promote, and even support something like recycling when market forces aren't sufficient to drive the effort?</font color=blue>

Well, this is a loaded question (although I'm not questioning your motivation in asking it.) Suffice to say, again, talking "human nature" here, "it depends."

Some will say "yes" - others will say "no." All goes back to what one believes the "correct" (notice I didn't say "right") model of government is. Change the subject (replace "recycling" with "military") and you'll get an entirely different set of answers from the same folks.

I really just don't want to go in to the whole "Recycling is Good" vs. "Recycling is Evil" debate or what my personal beliefs on how much government should intrude/participate in this particular area. Suffice to say, if it is "reasonable & appropriate" based on the specific local situation (e.g. high landfill availability/low landfill availability, high cost for virgin production/low cost for virgin production, high energy/resource consumption for recycling activity/low energy/resource consumption for recycling activity, etc.) my view could change.
 
   / Do you recycle?
  • Thread Starter
#30  
Ranchman,

Sounds like we can agree that at least some forms of recycling are in the "good" column, and that government might at least play a part in stimulating such activities with tax breaks, etc. By "government", BTW, I was including local county and city governments, which would likely be better able to judge such things as landfill impact. On the other hand, they would have limited ability to affect the commercial viability of some kinds of recycling, and that is where federal government involvement, at least in the form of tax breaks, might be necessary to the ultimate success of the enterprise. I do know that common sense is in part the set of mis-conceptions we all accumulate by the time we're twenty, and that what is intuitively obvious is often factually incorrect. However, I'd bet that as humanity expands and eats it's way through the environment, more and more recycling will move into the "good" column.

Now, given my background in academia, you might also assume I'd think federal programs funding research into recycling would be a good thing. You'd be absolutely correct. I'm flying blind on this one...I haven't done any research in this area, and I don't know anyone who has, but I'd be really surprised if there's not some chemist or chemical engineer somewhere in a university who has NSF funding to study plastic recycling, for instance. Some kinds of research, even research with an apparent industrial application, would not get done in the absence of federal funding.

Chuck
 

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